95 Percent of Fake Bombs Made It Through Airport Security in US Test

Does taking off your shoes, emptying your pockets and putting your laptop in a little plastic bin make you feel safe? Maybe it shouldn’t. According to the United States' Department of Homeland Security, the TSA is doing a lousy job. Like, “failed to detect mock weapons 95 per cent of the time” lousy.

That number comes from a recent internal investigation that pitted special Homeland Security “Red Team” members against security checkpoints in a dozen of the nation’s busiest airports. Out of 70 anonymous tests, the TSA managed to catch only three Red Team attempts to sneak fake weapons through airport security.

It sounds bad (and it is) but it’s not quite as bad as you might think. Red Team members are fully briefed on TSA protocol. They know everything the checkpoints look for and how they look for it—meaning they can craft near-perfect plans to exploit the system’s potential flaws. In theory, the Red Team’s plans are far and above what a potential terrorist might come up with—but the TSA’s failure to detect practically all of them is still completely inexcusable.

ABC reports that Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson immediately implemented a series of new protocols after reading the report, but clearly the agency still has a ways to go. [ABC News]